
Sherlock Holmes: Crimes and Punishments review for PS4, Xbox One
The answer to whether you should buy the newest Sherlock Holmes game is elementary.
The answer to whether you should buy the newest Sherlock Holmes game is elementary.
A rough approximation of the Senran Kagura: Shinovi Versus experience: boobs boobs boobs boobs butt boobs boobs boobs butt boobs. Boobs.
A retro-looking space shooter with an undeniably modern soundtrack.
A JRPG that’s not for the faint of heart or short of attention span.
In the world of crappy kiddie platformers, just being competent can earn you pretty high praise.
It’s time to build your own little Rube Goldberg machine of death.
Natural Doctrine has some very specific ideas on how you should go about playing it, and it won’t rest until you know exactly what those ideas are.
The Vita-fied version of Hyperdimension Neptunia is flawed, but not in the ways you might expect.
Nobody puts baby in the corner…because it’s full of terrifying tentacle monsters and partially-eaten children.
Run Like Hell! is such a regressive game, it jumps clear over “problematic” and well into “so, so racist” territory.
It may not be anything you haven’t seen before…but it’s also like nothing else out there.
If you’re looking forward to visiting Los Santos on your PS4, Xbox One or PC, you’ll be waiting a few more months.
Goodbye despair, hello murder and mayhem and homicidal stuffed animals.
Counterspy may have a too-short playtime and too-long load times, but neither of those things is enough to prevent it from being an otherwise outstanding game.
Not many games could be described as “Kubrickian”…but then again, not many games are as fantastic as The Swapper.
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